Dr. Jenkins. Yes, it is.
Mr. Specter. And is this in conjunction with the report you submitted to Mr. Price—do these reports constitute all the writings you have on your participation in the treatment of President Kennedy?
Dr. Jenkins. Yes; that's right.
Mr. Specter. One of the comments we were just discussing off the record—I would like to put on the record, Dr. Jenkins, is the question as to whether or not the wound in the neck would have been fatal in your opinion, absent the head wound. What would your view of that be?
Dr. Jenkins. Well, from my knowledge of the wound in the neck, this would not have been fatal, except for one thing, and that is—you have not told me whether the wound with its point of entrance and point of exit had contacted the vertebral column in its course?
Mr. Specter. It did not.
Dr. Jenkins. In that case I would not expect this wound to have been fatal.
Mr. Specter. What is your view, Dr. Jenkins, as to whether the wounds which you observed were caused by one or two bullets?
Dr. Jenkins. I felt quite sure at the time that there must have been two bullets—two missiles.
Mr. Specter. And, Dr. Jenkins, what was your reason for that?